Tackling the Complexities of Cyber Wordings

Cyber risk is evolving faster than many Wordings frameworks can adapt. Participants acknowledged that a “one-size-fits-all” approach is increasingly difficult to justify. Instead, the group called for tailored solutions that better reflect customer profiles, distribution channels, and regulatory realities.

Key themes from the discussion included:

  • Customer segmentation matters: Insurers must recognise that cyber clients are not uniform. Wordings should reflect nuanced business needs, particularly for different market segments and industries.
  • Business interruption (BI) clarity is critical: Several attendees highlighted ongoing challenges in BI wordings. Ensuring clarity around what is and isn’t covered is vital to managing expectations and avoiding hidden exposures.
  • Staying agile amid regulatory change: With the cyber regulatory landscape shifting rapidly, wordings need to be future-proofed. Structuring contracts with legal adaptability in mind enables faster response to market developments.
  • Understanding distribution channels: Participants noted that brokers and intermediaries play a vital role in how cyber cover is presented and interpreted. This must factor into how policies are framed and communicated.

Adaptability, alignment, and awareness will be central to evolving cyber wordings that are both protective and commercially viable.

Expanding and Diversifying the Wordings Talent Pool

The second half of the discussion shifted focus to the future of the Wordings workforce. More specifically, how to attract, retain and develop talent across all career stages. Attendees highlighted a shared concern: the profession’s growing demand is not being met by a pipeline equipped to fill it.

However, several practical strategies emerged:

  • Adopt a skills-first approach: The group encouraged looking beyond traditional Wordings CVs. Professionals from claims, legal, and underwriting backgrounds and even outside the insurance sector can all have transferable skills like contract interpretation and linguistic precision.
  • Promote the profession internally: Too often, Wordings roles are seen as technical or transactional. Attendees discussed reframing the narrative to showcase the variety, commercial value, and high-profile nature of the work.
  • Start early: Outreach efforts that introduce Wordings careers at school and university level could have long-term impact. Early education is key to shifting perceptions and opening the profession to a more diverse and curious talent pool.

There was strong alignment around the need to make wordings more visible, accessible, and aspirational for the next generation of insurance professionals.

Looking Ahead

This roundtable marks the beginning of an ongoing conversation about the future of Wordings in insurance and Arthur is proud to be at the heart of it. Thank you to all who attended and contributed, and to our expert facilitators William Healy and Ray Koh for sharing their insight.

If you’re already working in insurance and considering a career move into wordings or if you’re hiring and looking for the right expertise to grow your team our specialist consultants are here to help.

Contact our Wordings & Legal Recruitment Team: Matt Rowson.